scholarly journals Trade, Human Capital and Innovation: The Engines of European Regional Growth in the 1990s

Author(s):  
Harald Badinger ◽  
Gabriele Tondl
Author(s):  
GEORGE M. KORRES ◽  
GEORGE TSOMBANOGLOU ◽  
AIKATERINI KOKKINOU

2013 ◽  
Vol 62 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Peter H. Egger ◽  
Maximilian von Ehrlich

AbstractIn this paper we summarize recent research on the effects of European regional policy. Results point to a positive effect of this policy on average. One Euro spent even tends to generate more than one Euro in return in terms of GDP. However, the response varies drastically across recipient regions. First of all, there is evidence of existence of an optimum funding ratio (funds allocated relative to recipient GDP) where one Euro invested generates one Euro of return. About 36 percent of the regions receive higher funding than that, where one Euro generates less than one Euro of return (and, eventually, no return at all). Second, there is evidence of a bigger return on investment in regions with higher absorptive capacity level - measured by human capital endowments and the quality of recipient institutions. Insufficient levels of absorptive capacity lead to a wash of the Union’s transfers. About 70 percent of the regions exhibit such an insufficient level of absorptive capacity.


The role of human capital and, more specifically, the role of on the job training, has been widely analysed in the economic literature. Moreover, in the field of hospitality and tourism some studies focus on the relationship between training and hotel performance. This paper goes beyond this goal. It analyses the role of training on the hotel occupancy but, furthermore, it measures the impact of this human capital investment on the growth of a region, measured in terms of production, added value and employment. It combines both, microeconomic data from a database of two hundred hotels and the macro perspective of the Balearic Input-Output table, allowing measurement of the positive externalities that human capital investment in the hotel sector generates through the rest of the economy. Results show a positive and significant impact on potential growth and employment that goes beyond the strictly tourism-related sectors. In terms of policy recommendations, this work gives meaning to the promotion of public policies encouraging training practices at hotel level.


2015 ◽  
Vol 77 ◽  
pp. 47-64 ◽  
Author(s):  
Anabel Forte ◽  
Jesús Peiró-Palomino ◽  
Emili Tortosa-Ausina

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